Jens Oliver Meiert

Regarding the Fermi Paradox

Published on Jun 7, 2017 (updated Feb 5, 2024), filed under (feed). (Share this on Mastodon or Bluesky?)

My mostly metaphysical studies have not come so far yet that I want to start sharing the world views that have inspired and then originated in them, but when reading up on the Fermi Paradox (whether by Fermi or a paradox or not) and all the different ideas on why we haven’t yet detected extraterrestrial intelligence, I’ve felt taken aback. Science. Here are three spontaneous, makeshift ideas that I have about the Fermi Paradox.

1. We Have a Misconception of Time and Space

When we, these days (time), look at the physical universe (space), I think we miss that other forms of intelligence could be too small, too big, too fast, or too slow for us to perceive.

What if there are entire civilizations right “in front of us,” smaller than we deem the smallest particles? What if we’re contained in some, perhaps in a single member of another life form? What if each microsecond, entire civilizations rise and perish? What if all of mankind exists during just a glimpse of a sunny Wednesday morning for another intelligence? What if other life forms are simply not physical (just like we aren’t solely physical)?

2. We Have a Misconception of Life

We have really strange ideas about life. Plants don’t seem to have any value whatsoever for us (except for consumption). Animals don’t have value for us, either, and we industrially, violently contain, experiment on, and abuse and kill them. People, fellow human beings, are likewise suppressed, exploited, manipulated, tortured, as well as murdered through capital punishment, dronestrikes, and military aggression. Scientists, meanwhile, seem to think there are no boundaries to their work, and life not only deterministic, random, and worthless but also easy—a mere matter of time—to recreate.

This is all bullshit, and it’s all sick bullshit. Scientism has led not only to unjustified demystification (Weber) but an outright devaluation of all life.

The great misconception, the great misunderstanding that I’m referring to here is that life, magical as it still is, may be everywhere, and first and foremost embedded in consciousness. And that could mean that “extraterrestrial” intelligence is all around us—yet as we’re incapable of recognizing and appreciating consciousness and the magic of life even in plants and animals, we can rather evidently not find it anywhere else.

Though poorly phrased academically speaking, this may well be a key argument against all our efforts around identifying other forms of life.

3. We Face Distortions Through Our Instruments

A student of Jane Roberts (or Seth) I wish to simply quote from Seth, Dreams, and Projections of Consciousness:

Your scientists can count their elements, and while they are on the wrong track, they will discover more and more elements until they are ready to go out of their minds. And while they create instruments to deal with smaller and smaller particles, they will see smaller and smaller particles, seemingly without end. As their instruments reach further into the physical universe, they will see further and further, but they will automatically and unconsciously transform what they apparently see into the camouflage patterns with which they are familiar. They will be, and are, prisoners of their tools.

In a way, we can only discover what we are prepared to discover (quickly written down, there’s much depth to this statement). Our physical instruments limit and distort what we can discover, and the solution seems to lie in, again, moving away from just the physical:

It is not a matter of inventing new instruments any longer, but of using the “invisible” ones you have.

âť§ I have no doubt that there are other life forms beyond the ones we seem acquainted with in our shared physical realities. I find the subject fascinating to explore and philosophize about. I love the idea that we can make contact through our inner facilities, through our minds. But most interesting to me, still, is how we can get more people to look inward, rather than outward, to free themselves from the boundaries that ironically (and just as interestingly), we have placed on ourselves all by ourselves.

Now, for a bonus question, who says that other intelligences want to be found?

About Me

Jens Oliver Meiert, on November 9, 2024.

I’m Jens (long: Jens Oliver Meiert), and I’m a web developer, manager, and author. I’ve worked as a technical lead and engineering manager for small and large enterprises, I’m an occasional contributor to web standards (like HTML, CSS, WCAG), and I write and review books for O’Reilly and Frontend Dogma.

I love trying things, not only in web development and engineering management, but also in other areas like philosophy. Here on meiert.com I share some of my experiences and views. (I value you being critical, interpreting charitably, and giving feedback.)